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e-Article

Effects of UV laser micropatterning on frictional performance of diamond-like nanocomposite films.
Document Type
Article
Source
Applied Physics A: Materials Science & Processing. Nov2016, Vol. 122 Issue 11, p1-11. 11p.
Subject
*ULTRAVIOLET lasers
*FRICTION
*DIAMOND films
*NANOCOMPOSITE materials
*GRAPHITIZATION
*THIN films
Language
ISSN
0947-8396
Abstract
We report on UV laser modification and micropatterning of diamond-like nanocomposite (DLN) films (a-C:H,Si:O) with nanosecond pulses and effects of laser surface microstructuring on the frictional performance of DLN films on the nano- and macroscale. A technique of direct laser interference patterning was applied to produce arrays of periodic linear microstructures on the DLN films. The UV laser irradiation was performed at low fluences corresponding to the regime of surface graphitization and incipient ablation. At the initial stage of the thin film modification, the laser-induced spallation and graphitization in the surface layers were found to strongly influence the nanoscale topography and mechanical properties of the DLN surface. Frictional properties of the laser-patterned DLN films were studied using (1) atomic force microscopy in lateral force mode and (2) a ball-on-flat tribometer under linear reciprocating sliding against a 100Cr6 steel ball. The lateral force microscopy measurements revealed that the laser-irradiated regions were characterized by increased friction forces due to microspallation effects and enhanced surface roughness, correlating with tribotests at the initial stage of sliding. During prolonged sliding in ambient air, both the original and laser-patterned DLN surfaces exhibited low-friction performance at the friction coefficient of 0.07-0.08. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]